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The song interpolates the verse melody and chords of "Thinkin' 'Bout You Baby", an earlier Wilson-Love composition that was first recorded in April 1964 and released as a single two months later by Sharon Marie [6] —a teenager Love met at a June 1963 Beach Boys concert in Sonoma County and helped sign to Capitol Records [7] —with production by Wilson himself. [8]
Reviewing the song for AllMusic, Matthew Greenwald wrote: Perhaps the Beach Boys' most contemporary piece of music recorded in 1969, "It's About Time" is a total group effort, between the writing, singing, and performing. A solid, almost dark R&B/rock feel guides the melody with a sense of precision.
The Beach Boys were a critically and commercially successful band whose music is defined as being culturally significant. Through their immense influence, many notable artists began covering their original songs while various commemorative tribute albums have been created.
"Time to Get Alone" is a song by the American rock band the Beach Boys from their 1969 album 20/20. Written by Brian Wilson and produced by Carl Wilson , it is a baroque pop waltz . [ 2 ] Brian originally intended the song for Redwood , the band that evolved into Three Dog Night .
This is in sharp contrast to Pet Sounds where most of the songs have titles and lyrics that evoke specific situations and feelings. Smile's radicalism begins with and centers around the fact that it is abstract, whereas all previous Beach Boys records and most rock-and-roll songs are concrete in their imagery. They have words, and those words ...
"Here Today" was written by Brian Wilson and Tony Asher for the Beach Boys' Pet Sounds album in early 1966. [2] Although Wilson claimed that Asher only provided the words to his music, Asher credited himself with contributing musical ideas to several songs on the album, [3] including this one, as Asher stated, "'Here Today' contains a little more of me both lyrically and melodically than Brian."
The title of the album alludes to David Cassidy's one-time dominance of the pop charts as a teen-idol (see The Partridge Family) and the eventual drop of his superstar status. The album only reached the charts in the UK, where it peaked at number 22. The album features the track "Darlin'", a song from Bruce Johnston's band, The Beach Boys ...
The Beach Boys 8. "I Do" (Demo) Wilson, Roger Christian: The Beach Boys 9. "Bobby Left Me" (Backing track) Brian Wilson 10. "If It Can't Be You" (a.k.a. I'll Never Love Again) Gary Usher 11. "You Brought It All on Yourself" The Honeys 12. "Make the Night a Little Longer" Carole King, Gerry Goffin: The Honeys 13.